Go to home page - New Zealand History online

Pages tagged with: teenagers

After a hesitant beginning in the early 1970s, rock festivals hit their stride with Nambassa, Sweetwaters and a string of smaller events in the early 1980s. Following a period of decline, festivals are today as popular as ever with The Big Day Out, WOMAD and others catering to a wide range of musical taste.
The early rock music festivals held in Auckland and Ngaruawahia reflected the troubled emergence of teenagers as a distinctive group and economic force in the second half of the twentieth century.
No-one predicted the success of the 1979 Nambassa Festival which drew over 65,000 fans.
Sweetwaters - Festival of Music, Culture and Technology. There was a lot to that new tagline. It had the future in it. A modernity echoed by the band line-up. Having come together in a mass statement of being youth culture now began to define and divide beginning a pattern still visible today.
From the late 1980s into the 1990s small scale and sharply focused rock music festivals would be the norm, though there were some notable exceptions
As the new century dawned it was clear music festivals were now a viable and often long-running proposition. WOMAD, the Big Day Out and others continue to attract huge crowds each year
To tackle the housing crisis in the late 1930s the Labour government created the Department of Housing Construction. With the help of Fletcher Construction, 3445 state houses were constructed in three years.